DocM
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Thanks for that reply, Bruce - I understand. One can add a series of events together linearly and wonder about fate. For example, when I was only eight or so, I visited my grandfather's house in Brooklyn. It was raining, an ugly day. He asked what my brother and I wanted to eat, and I said hotdogs. My parents pointed out that it was raining pretty hard, and there were none to be found anywhere nearby. He ended up going out in the rain for us, and dropped on the street and had a heart attack. He died within a few days.
I always thought, as children will do "what if I hadn't asked him to go and get that hotdog?" Would he have still collapsed, as he did on the street? A lot of questions, and guilt for a young boy. Of course, the blockages in his coronary arteries were ready. Of course that one trip didn't give him a chronic disease. But if I could go back in time, I would have told him not to go, I would have pleaded not to, no matter what.
If linear time is only present here, then the concept of fate may be more moot for our consciousness/soul. If past, present and future are coexistent in one "everpresent" state, then with intention and free will we are constantly making decisions and in charge of the ultimate outcome. I have seen studies from Princeton's PEAR laboratory where conscious decisions and intent have an outcome on past events (I gave an example of this in the PEAR thread I started about a ticker tape of "heads and tails" already printed then given to a person to try to alter toward more heads than tails).
So, in essence I agree with you Bruce. There may be such a thing as fate, but our conscious minds are very much involved in the decisions that lead toward it. (we are of the same mind on this). I do not, however accept the fact that we are helpless puppets in any way in this area. This is a myth, that we are acted upon by the universe instead of the one pulling the strings.
Our conscious minds and presence are, by nature creative forces capable of wonderous and powerful manifestations here in C1, if we only realize it.
Great thread,
Matthew
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